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Prof, George J. Keller's Wild Animal Circus I*o/H FEATURE OF THE FAIR MIDWAY A WILD ANIMAL ACT THAT IS NATIONALLY FAMOUS r PERFORMING LIONS, TIGERS, LEOPARDS, MOUNTAIN LIONS and PUMAS I FEATURING "ROCHESTER" THE ONLY I BLACK PANTHER BORN TO LIVE IN I CAPTIVITY I TEN BIG CIRCUS ACTS! I EVERYTHING NEW! EVERYTHING NEW! Students from 8 Counties Find Admission Delayed 9/20/41 Harrisburg, Sept. 19 (&)???Heads of the fourteen State Teachers Colleges scheduled to open next Monday decided today to defer until ' September 29 the admission of stu- I dents from eight central counties J hardest hit by infantile paralysis. The colleges had postponed opening until September 22 for all students, at the request of state health officials. The decision to continue the ban from the eight counties was reached late today after conferences between Dr. Francis B. Hass, superintendent of public instruction, the board of 'presidents of the Teachers Colleges, and chiefs of the health department.The counties banned are York, Lebanon, Dauphin, Schuylkill, Montgomery, Cambria, Northumland and the Columbia area of Lancaster county. Public schools in all eight counties, plus Cumberland, have been ordered to remain closed until September 29 as a result of the outbreak, which has taken 30 lives to date this year. Seventeen new cases boosted Pennsylvania's official number of infantile paralysis victims to 441 but State Department of Health officials said they saw some improvement in the state-wide situation."The total for this week is a little below the level we had had for the last three weeks, which makes the situation look a little better," declared Dr. A. H. Stewart, acting secretary of health. New cases officially reported today were in Franklin, Beaver and Lawrence counties, two each, and one each in Northumberland, Lancaster, Juniata, Erie, Warren, Mercer, York and Washington.

Prof, George J. Keller's Wild Animal Circus I*o/H FEATURE OF THE FAIR MIDWAY A WILD ANIMAL ACT THAT IS NATIONALLY FAMOUS r PERFORMING LIONS, TIGERS, LEOPARDS, MOUNTAIN LIONS and PUMAS I FEATURING "ROCHESTER" THE ONLY I BLACK PANTHER BORN TO LIVE IN I CAPTIVITY I TEN BIG CIRCUS ACTS! I EVERYTHING NEW! EVERYTHING NEW! Students from 8 Counties Find Admission Delayed 9/20/41 Harrisburg, Sept. 19 (&)???Heads of the fourteen State Teachers Colleges scheduled to open next Monday decided today to defer until ' September 29 the admission of stu- I dents from eight central counties J hardest hit by infantile paralysis. The colleges had postponed opening until September 22 for all students, at the request of state health officials. The decision to continue the ban from the eight counties was reached late today after conferences between Dr. Francis B. Hass, superintendent of public instruction, the board of 'presidents of the Teachers Colleges, and chiefs of the health department.The counties banned are York, Lebanon, Dauphin, Schuylkill, Montgomery, Cambria, Northumland and the Columbia area of Lancaster county. Public schools in all eight counties, plus Cumberland, have been ordered to remain closed until September 29 as a result of the outbreak, which has taken 30 lives to date this year. Seventeen new cases boosted Pennsylvania's official number of infantile paralysis victims to 441 but State Department of Health officials said they saw some improvement in the state-wide situation."The total for this week is a little below the level we had had for the last three weeks, which makes the situation look a little better," declared Dr. A. H. Stewart, acting secretary of health. New cases officially reported today were in Franklin, Beaver and Lawrence counties, two each, and one each in Northumberland, Lancaster, Juniata, Erie, Warren, Mercer, York and Washington.